| Title: | What
Explains the Effects of Technology Shocks on Labor Market Dynamics?
|
| Number: | 04-14 |
| Author: | Zheng Liu and Louis Phaneuf |
| Issue Date: | September 2004 |
| Abstract: |
The sticky-price theory has
proved fairly successful in explaining the dynamic effects of
technology shocks on employment, at least under weak accommodation of
monetary policy to the shocks. Yet, when we extend the analysis
to a broader set of labor market variables, including employment as
well as real wages and nominal wages, the sticky-price theory cannot
claim victory: it fails to account for the observed wage dynamics
following technology shocks unless one is willing to assume implausibly
large degrees of monetary policy accommodation and large values of
labor supply elasticity. We show that a model that allows for a role of
nominal wage rigidity, coupled with a modest degree of price stickiness
as some recent research suggests, provides a better account for the
macroeconomic effects of technology shocks on the labor market.
|
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